The ranking is based on data from the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics. The data include deaths from both legally prescribed and illegally produced fentanyl.
The age-adjusted opioid overdose death rate for the U.S. was 14.9 per 100,000 individuals.
Here are the fatal opioid overdose rates in each state and the District of Columbia for 2017 (the most recent data available), ranked by overdose death rate per 100,000 individuals:
1. West Virginia — 49.6
2. Ohio — 39.2
3. District of Columbia — 34.7
4. New Hampshire — 34
5. Maryland — 32.2
6. Maine — 29.9
7. Massachusetts — 28.2
8. Kentucky — 27.9
9. Delaware — 27.8
10. Connecticut — 27.7
11. Rhode Island — 26.9
12. New Jersey — 22
13. Michigan — 21.2
13. Pennsylvania — 21.2
15. Vermont — 20
16. North Carolina — 19.8
17. Tennessee — 19.3
18. Indiana — 18.8
19. Illinois — 17.2
20. Wisconsin — 16.9
21. New Mexico — 16.7
22. Missouri — 16.5
23. Florida — 16.3
24. New York — 16.1
25. South Carolina — 15.5
25. Utah — 15.5
27. Virginia — 14.8
28. Alaska — 13.9
29. Arizona — 13.5
30. Nevada — 13.3
31. Oklahoma — 10.2
32. Colorado — 10
33. Georgia — 9.7
34. Washington — 9.6
35. Louisiana — 9.3
36. Alabama — 9
37. Wyoming — 8.7
38. Oregon — 8.1
39. Minnesota — 7.8
40. Iowa — 6.9
41. Arkansas — 6.5
42. Mississippi — 6.4
43. Idaho — 6.2
44. California — 5.3
45. Kansas — 5.1
45. Texas — 5.1
47. North Dakota — 4.8
48. South Dakota — 4.0
49. Montana — 3.6
50. Hawaii — 3.4
51. Nebraska — 3.1
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